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War crimes suspect Shaul Mofaz evades arrest at UK parliament

Shaul Mofaz meeting with US officials in 2002, when he was Israeli chief of staff.

Wikipedia

The former head of the Israeli military Shaul Mofaz was allowed to speak in the UK parliament on Monday despite calls from Palestinians and their allies for his immediate arrest due to alleged responsibility for war crimes.

Mofaz was in charge of the Israeli armed forces between 1998 and 2002, a period which spanned the brutal repression of the second intifada including the bloody military assaults on Palestinian cities which Israel code-named Operation Defensive Shield.

After his military career ended, Mofaz moved into politics and held a number of positions in the Israeli government including minister of defense, where he was again responsible for numerous human rights violations, including torture, home demolitions and collective punishment.

A PCHR statement reminded the UK government, the attorney general and the UK’s chief prosecutor of their “solemn international duties” under article 146 of the Fourth Geneva Convention of 1949 to “seek out and prosecute” those suspected of committing war crimes. It called on UK authorities to “strike a blow against impunity” and “restore public confidence in the effectiveness of international criminal law regardless of the nationality of the suspect.”

However, instead of being arrested in London on suspicion of war crimes (as former Rwandan spy chief Karanze Karake was on the same day) Mofaz was allowed to speak at a meeting in parliament, demonstrating how Israel is singled out for impunity.

A pro-Israel event called “UK-Israel Shared Strategic Challenges,” organized by the lobby group BICOM with the newspaper Jewish News and held in the Attlee Suite of Portcullis House, gave Mofaz top billing on its day-long schedule (see full document below). Ironically, the war crimes suspect declared that the boycott, divestment and sanctions movement “harms peace,” is “evil” and “hypocritical.”

As David Cronin has reported, BICOM also lists indicted war criminal Michael Herzog, a retired Israeli brigadier general, as a “senior visiting fellow.” A war crimes investigations was opened in Spain in January 2009 over Herzog’s role in the 2002 bombing of a residential area in Gaza.

War criminal in the building

Numerous members of the UK political and media elite were happy to join Mofaz, including leading Conservative Friends of Israel lawmakers such as Foreign Office Minister Tobias Ellwood and Robert Halfon. The latter joined the cabinet as minister without portfolio following the election in May, in the role formerly held by Sayeeda Warsi, who resigned last summer calling the UK’s silence over Israel’s attack on Gaza “morally indefensible.”

A host of pressure groups and think tanks also sent personnel to the event, as well as BICOM’s own Alan Johnson and Richard Pater, Jeremy Newmark from the new Israel Solidarity Campaign was present, along with Gillian Merron from the Board of Deputies, Alan Mendoza from the Henry Jackson Society, Shashank Joshi from the Royal United Services Institute, Richard Dalton from Chatham House, and Maajid Nawaz of the Quilliam Foundation.

He and Wilf claimed there was what they called a “structural bias” at the UN Human Rights Council, echoing the longstanding and outright impunity Israel grants its military. In the face of this impunity, it might have been hoped the UK would seek to uphold international law when those responsible for similar crimes are within its jurisdiction.

However, after arrest warrants were issued for Israeli general Doron Almog in 2005 and Tzipi Livni (foreign minister during Israel’s 2008-09 massacre in Gaza) in 2009, the UK government changed the law in 2011 to make it harder for warrants of war crimes suspects to be issued.

Nonetheless, the extra protections it brought about only applied to official visits, meaning Mofaz, whose political career is now over, remained vulnerable. He could not follow the example set just last week by Livni, who set up meetings with government officials while in London to attend Fortune’s Most Powerful Women Summit, thus qualifying for immunity under “Special Mission” status granted by the Foreign Office.

The Israeli embassy and pro-Israel groups had reportedly been “scrambling” to get Mofaz diplomatic immunity to no avail. He decided to take the risk anyway – and British authorities allowed him to get away with murder.

Comments

Britain is an extremely false and hypocritical nation. It harbours many of the world's worst criminals from its recent campaigns in the Middle East, notably the illegal invasion of Iraq and ensuing mass slaughter, torture, rape, trauma, displacement, migration, etc. I believe some the war criminals from the vicious, racially charged slaughter of Kenyans are still at large and living comfortably in their old age. Meanwhile Britain embarks upon a moral crusade whether it is in their interests to point the finger elsewhere. Sickening, sickening people.

Thanks for informing us of the effort to hold Moaz accountable, Hilary. The Palestinian Centre for Human Rights acted honourably on behalf of Israel's victims. It's too bad the UK authorities still refuse any legal redress. By the way, I didn't see a statement from the Met explaining their failure to take Moaz into custody. Is there any written response from their end?

Expecting BRITISH ISRAELISM to hold itself accountable is totally unreasonable, and unrealistic. UK is just as controlled by Zionists as USA, France, NATO--- and its actions will coincide with that fact.

Hilary Aked (@hilary_aked) is a London-based freelance writer and researcher, an NCTJ-qualified journalist and a PhD student at the University of Bath researching the pro-Israel lobby in the UK. They also write for Spinwatch, Ceasefire, OpenDemocracy and Huffington Post.